The courtyard of the University Heights family housing apartments. The back of the photo has caption: "Dave Boerl and Student." Boerl was assistant director of Student Residential Life at the time.
From caption: Mrs. Frank Church tries crushing grain while visiting the Strategic Hamlet north of Dalat in Tuyen Duo Province, Republic of South Vietnam. Also pictured are three young women outside a hut with a small white dog.
From caption: Bethine Church escorts Nancy Kefauver and a very pregnant First Lady Jackie Kennedy for a Women's National Democratic Luncheon in Washington, D.C.
Bethine Church as photographed in her home. Caption reads, "Bethine Church has helped develop BSU's first endowed chair, which is named after her late husband, Senator Frank Church."
Senator and Mrs. Church pose for a publicity shot that was used for a campaign postcard. The photograph was taken in the Senate Photo Studio with a mock background of the Senate. From caption on back of postcard: "Senator Frank Church of Idaho and...
Caption from brochure: "Robert W. Limbert with an "honest fish story" about Salmon caught in the Salmon River." The brochure advertised the splendors of Redfish Lake Lodge.
The Finger of Fate remains a landmark of the Sawtooth Mountains, with an altitude of 9,775 feet. Limbert's Redfish Lake Lodge brochure caption reads "Finger of Fate...9 miles from Lodge...one of the many freaks of nature found close to the lodge."
Robert Limbert holds a line of caught fish from Redfish Lake. The caption reads "One's hour's catch of Rainbow trout...all fish under 18 in. were thrown back."
Caption from one of Robert Limbert's scrapbooks: "One morning we sighted a band of sheep which had got lost and true to a homing instinct had endeavored to get back to their home range on the shortest possible route. The result was they were in...
Hot spring water flowed into what Robert W. Limbert coined "Indian bath tubs" while exploring the Bruneau Valley in 1921. Some petroglyphs can be seen near the water that is pouring into the hole.
Four men from the expedition examine the lava formations while carrying rifles and camping supplies. From left to right: Ad Santel, two unidentified men, and Robert W. Limbert. This photograph was printed in the 1924 National Geographic article,...
Robert W. Limbert's article, "Idaho's Natural Bridge Revealed to the World," described the natural wonder which he named "Bridge of the Moon." The caption in the article reads, "this wonderful rock formation spanning an abrupt canyon in central...